Abstract

The BZ-A oilfield is one of the significant discoveries within the Huanghekou Sag, the southern Bohai Sea Basin, China, and the reservoirs of the BZ-A oilfield were deposited in the Paleogene period. Unfortunately, the spatial continuity of the Paleogene clastic reservoirs of the BZ-A oilfield was destroyed by the widely distributed igneous rocks. Characterizing those “isolated” clastic geobodies is the main task in the exploration and production phases. The exploration wells within the BZ-A oilfield demonstrate that the size of the clastic geobodies is one of the main factors that determine if a new drilled well is a commercial oil-producing well. The spatial distribution and the size of igneous rocks are other important factors affecting whether a drilled well is an oil-producing well. Thus, the analysis of 3D geomorphology of igneous rocks is among the most important tasks in well and development planning. We integrate 3D seismic data, well logs, and core data to characterize the Paleogene igneous bodies within the BZ-A oilfield. The analyzing procedure begins with determining the igneous rock types by analyzing the texture of cores and corresponding thin sections. Then, the volcanic/volcaniclastic facies are defined by integrating the well logs and igneous rock. Finally, the volcanic edifices are interpreted by integrating the seismic data, well logs, and core data. The analysis demonstrates that the volcanic edifice usually consists of five facies (volcanic conduit, effusive, explosive, extrusive, volcanic sedimentary, and subvolcanic facies). The overall shape of the edifice and the distribution of each facies are controlled by the volcanic eruption styles. In our study area, the seismic variance attribute can be used to locate the volcanic conduit facies, and the seismic root-mean-square amplitude can characterize the volcanic effusive facies.

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